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Fig. 35.—Head of embryo of honey bee: B, a little later stage than A. pr.m, premandibular segment; cl, clypeus; ant, antenna; md, mandible; mx, first maxilla; mx′, second maxilla; sp, spiracle.—After Bütschli.
As early as 1870 Bütschli observed in the embryo of the honey bee the rudiments of what appeared to be a pair of appendages between the antennæ and mandibles, but, judging by his figures, nearer to and more like the mandibles than the rudimentary antennæ (Fig. 35); they seemed to him “almost like a pair of inner antennæ.”
“I find,” he says, “in no other insects any indication of this peculiar appendage, which at the time of its greatest development attains a larger size than the antennæ, and which, afterwards becoming less distinct, forms by fusion with that on the other side a sort of larval lower lip. That this appendage does not belong to the category of segmental appendages is indicated by the site of its origin on the upper side of the primitive band.” (Zeitschr. wissen. Zool., xx, p. 538.)